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Bryce Molder played a practice round early Tuesday morning, going through the motions to learn the course, and he didn't recall seeing too many birdie opportunities on the famed Blue Course. With a pencil in hand, he birdied the first two holes, added birdies on the fourth and fifth holes, and wound up with a 64 to join Woods and Points.
"I don't know what to say about that, other than I think I just went out there with no expectations other than just trying to hit the first fairway and go from there," Molder said. "And on a golf course like this, you have to play it like that."
Steve Elkington had a 65, while Jim Furyk led the group of players at 66. Three dozen players in the 120-man field wound up shooting in the 60s, including U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover at 69, and nearly half were at par or better.
Woods rolled in a 50-foot birdie putt on the par-3 second hole, and a 30-footer on the 12th. That helped him to his 64, and it never hurts to see the ball go in the hole, especially coming off a U.S. Open when he couldn't make anything.
"Just part of golf," Woods said. "You have weeks, and you have days, when you putt well. And other times, you don't."
This was one of those days to score well, mainly because of overnight rain that softened the course. It kept tee shots from rolling through the fairway, and allowed players to take aim at the flags.
That's right up Kim's alley, although he showed far more discipline Thursday, attacking only when it made sense. Kim only missed one green, coming up just short on the 18th and pitching down the ridge to 3 feet. His longest par putt was from 4 feet on two occasions, and he made both to make it 40 consecutive holes at Congressional without a bogey dating to the third round last year.
The trick now is to keep going, and the gallery would love to see Woods stay right there with him.
"Hopefully, we can both get into that situation," Woods said. "But we have a long way to go before it happens."
[Associated Press;
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